Publication date: 5 November 2017
Source:Materials & Design, Volume 133
Author(s): Bishnu Kumar Shrestha, Sita Shrestha, Arjun Prasad Tiwari, Jeong-In Kim, Sung Won Ko, Han-Joo Kim, Chan Hee Park, Cheol Sang Kim
In this study, we prepared nanotopographical polyurethane (PU)-based bioactive scaffolds that incorporated uniformly dispersed functionalized multi-wall carbon nanotubes (fMWCNTs) and zinc oxide (ZnO) nanoparticles (NPs) using an electrospinning technique. We found that well dispersed fMWCNTs along with ZnO NPs reinforced PU fibers demonstrated significant improvement in mechanical strength, hydrophilicity, thermal stability, electrical conductivity, degradability, biomineralization, and biocompatibility. Inspired by the exciting nature of biopolymeric composite (PU/ZnO-fMWCNTs) membranes, these hybrid scaffolds offer extensive interest to tissue engineering as a potential biomedical application. The specific bioactive properties and cell-biomaterial interaction of electrospun scaffold containing 0.2wt% ZnO with 0.4wt% fMWCNTs were found to demonstrate anti-bacterial activity and cytocompatibility. Furthermore, the highly charged density, large surface-to-volume ratio, and more functional groups in fMWCNTs integrated on the scaffolds promote osteogenic differentiation of pre-osteoblast (MC3T3-E1) cells. Therefore, the novel as-prepared multifunctional electrospun fibrous scaffold could suggest new avenues for exploration as promising osteoproductive and osteoinductive biomaterials that offer great benefit to bone tissue engineering.
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